This project emerges out of a desire to situate bodies as a place of knowing in encounters with everyday digital technologies. Early findings reveal patterns around individual agency amid data-rich environments, neoliberal uses of data logs and corporate surveillance of women's bodies, and questions around the relationships between somatics, embodiment, haptics, and technologies for knowing and understanding the body.

The goals of this project are to better understand how we perform data and how data performs us; to understand a range of feminist, intersectional, and decolonizing approaches to using and creating data, algorithms, and interfaces, and to understand the long history of quantification as it relates to cycles of discrimination and oppression.